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NST110: Advanced Toxicology
Lecture 1: Principles of Toxicology
Principles of Toxicity
1. Defining toxicology
2. History of toxicology
3. Dose response
4. Evaluating safety
Toxicology
Toxicology is the study of adverse effects of chemicals on
living systems, including:
•Mechanisms of action and exposure to chemicals as a cause of
acute and chronic illness.
•Understanding physiology and pharmacology by using toxic agents
as chemical probes.
•Recognition, identification, quantification of hazards from
occupational exposure to chemicals.
•Discovery of new drugs and pesticides.
•Development of standards and regulations to protect humans and
the environment from adverse effects of chemicals.
Branches of Toxicology
1. Mechanistic—cellular, biochemical and
molecular mechanisms by which
chemicals cause toxic responses
2. Forensic—cause of death, legal aspects
3. Clinical—treatments for poisonings and
injuries caused by xenobiotics
4. Environmental—environmental
pollutants, effects on flora and fauna
5. Food—adverse effects of processed or
natural food components
6. Regulatory—assigns risk to substances
of commercial importance.
Origins of Toxicology
•Earliest humans used animal venoms and plant extracts
for hunting, warfare and assassination.
•400 BC: Hippocrates compiled a listing of a number of
poisons and outlined some clinical toxicology principles.
•1493-1541: Paracelsus—physician and philosopher
•All substances are poisons; the right dose
differentiates a poisons from a remedy.
•“Dose determines toxicity.”
•1775: Percival Pott found that soot caused scrotal
cancer in chimney sweeps. Much later the carcinogens in
soot found to be polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.
•1972: Rachel Carson/EPA led to ban of insecticide DDT
for environmental and health concerns
Examples of Toxicological Cases
• 399 B.C. Socrates, a Greek Philosopher died of
Hemlock poisoning (according to Plato)
• Coniine is the active toxic ingredient
• Antagonist for the nicotinic acetylcholine
receptor, leading to cessation of
neurotransmission, muscular and
respiratory collapse and death
coniine
• October 20th, 1740 Charles VI, Holy Roman
Emperor, King of Bohemia, Hungary, and
Croatia died from eating death cap mushrooms
• Active ingredient is alpha-amanitin that
inhibits RNA polymerase inhibiting protein
synthesis leading to hepatocellular lysis,
liver failure, kidney failure, coma,
respiratory failure, and death
Alpha-amanitin
Examples of Toxicological Cases
• April 30th, 1945, Eva Braun, long-time
companion of Hitler committed suicide with a
cyanide capsule
• Inhibitor of cytochrome c oxidase, part of
complex IV of the electron transport chain
and inhibits ATP production leading to brain
death and heart cessation, hypoxia, and
death
• Jan 16th, 1975 Bando Mitsugoro VIII, a famous
Japanese Kabuki actor died from eating 4 livers
of pufferfish
• Active toxic ingredient is tetrodotoxin
• Tetrodotoxin blocks voltage-gated sodium
channels leading to suppression of
neurotransmission, numbness,
bronchospasms, coma, respiratory failure,
death
tetrodotoxin
Examples of Toxicological Cases
• 1932-1968: Minamata disaster—caused by methylmercury
toxicity from industrial wastewater from Chisso
Corporation in Minamata City in Japan
• 2265 victims
• Caused neurological syndrome associated with
methyl mercury poisoning including ataxia, numbness,
insanity, muscle weakness, hearing and speech loss,
birth defects, paralysis, coma, death
• Alters neurochemistry and neurotransmission through
multiple mechanisms
• 1988, Saddam Hussein used sarin on Kurds, 1995,
Japanese subway sarin attack by terrorist group; 2006 day
5 of “24”—Jack Bauer saves LA from VX attack in TV
show; 2013 Assad uses sarin against rebels
• Sarin and VX are an organophosphorus chemical
warfare agents that inhibits acetylcholinesterase,
leading to excess acetylcholine and hyperstimulation
of neurons, resulting in seizures, tremoring,
convulsions, excess salivation, excess tearing,
urination, defecation, bronchoconstriction, respiratory
failure, death
Methyl mercury
sarin
Dose-Response
Individual dose-response
Response of an individual organism to varying doses of a chemical (also called
“graded” response because effect is continuous over a dose range) (e.g.
enzyme activity, blood pressure).
Y-axis: % of max. response
(linear in middle range)
100
X-axis: dose (e.g. mg/kg or molar
concentration) (plotted as log
base 10)
% response
% maximal
response
80
A
60
Can derive lethal dose (LD50),
toxic dose (TD50), effective dose
(ED50) values from doseresponse data.
40
B
20
0
10-1
100
101
102
dose, mg/kg
103
104
Inhibitory concentration (IC50)
can also be determined from
concentration-response curves.
Dose-Response Curves for Beneficial Substances
toxicity
death
threshold for
adverse response
response
region of
homeostasis
deficiency
toxicity
dose
•For substances required for normal physiological function and
survival, the dose-response curves will be U- or J-shaped.
•At very low doses, there is an adverse effect (deficiency), which
decreases with increasing dose (homeostasis). At very high
doses, an adverse response appears from toxicity.
•For example, vitamin A can cause liver toxicity and birth defects
at high doses and vitamin A deficiency is lethal.
Evaluating Dose-Response Relationships
ED: Effective dose
100
% response
(therapeutic dose of a drug)
80
60
40
50 %
response
TD: Toxic dose
ED
(dose at which toxicity occurs)
TD
NOAEL LOAEL
LD
20
LD: Lethal dose
(dose at which death occurs)
NOAEL: no observed adverse effect level
LOAEL: lowest observed adverse effect
0
level
-2
-1
0
1
2
3
10 10 10 10 10 10
dose (mg/kg)
ED50: dose at which 50% of population therapeutically responds.
(In this example, ED50=1 mg/kg)
TD50: dose at which 50% of population experiences toxicity (TD50=10 mg/kg).
LD50: dose at which 50% of population dies (LD50=100 mg/kg).
Comparing Toxicity of Compounds
Therapeutic Index (TI)
TI = LD50/ED50
or
TI = TD50/ED50
•TI is the ratio of the doses of the toxic and the desired
responses.
• TI is used as an index of comparative toxicity of two different
materials; approximate statement of the relative safety of a
drug.
•The larger the ratio, the greater the relative safety.
Example of using TI to compare relative
safety of 2 drugs.
80
80
ED
60
TD
40
0
-5
-4
-3
-2
-1
0
1
2
3
10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10
drug A dose (mg/kg)
4
% response
% reponse
20
% effect
100
% effect
100
60
ED
40
TD
20
0
10-5 10-4 10-3 10-2 10-1 100 101 102 103 104
drug B dose (mg/kg)
Drug A: TI = TD50/ED50 = 100/0.01= 10000
Drug B: TI = TD50/ED50 = 1/0.01 = 100
Which drug is safer?
Disadvantages of Using TI
100
LD
A
ED
A and B
80
% response
% effect
99 % response
60
LD
B
40
20
0
10-3
50 % response
1 % response
10-2
10-1
100
101
102
103
dose (mg/kg)
Drug A: ED50 = 2 mg/kg; LD50= 100 mg/kg
Drug B: ED50 = 2 mg/kg; LD50= 100 mg/kg
Drugs A and B both have the same TI = 100/2 = 50
Therapeutic index does not take into account the slope
of the dose-response curves.
Margin of Safety
% response
% effect
100
99 % response
LD
A
ED
A and B
80
60
LD
B
40
20
0
10-3
50 % response
1 % response
10-2
10-1
100
101
102
103
dose (mg/kg)
Margin of safety can overcome this deficiency by using ED99 for
the desired effect and LD1 for the undesired effect.
Margin of safety = LD1/ED99
Drug A: LD1/ED99 = 10 / 10 = 1
Drug B: LD1/ED99 = 0.002 / 10 = 0.0002
Thus, Drug B is much less safe than Drug A.
Toxic Potency
Agent
LD50 (mg/kg)
Ethyl alcohol
10,000
Sodium chloride
4,000
BHA/BHT (antioxidants)
2,000
Morphine sulfate
900
Caffeine
200
Nicotine
1
Curare
0.5
Shellfish toxin
0.01
sarin
0.001
Botulinum toxin
0.00001
slight
moderate
high
Extremely high
(<1 mg/kg)